午夜福利1000集合

Giant pandas’ secret social life revealed

GPS trackers placed on five pandas in a nature reserve in China show they sometimes hang out together for weeks at a time
Well, fancy meeting you here
Well, fancy meeting you here
(Image: Juan-Carlos Munoz/FLPA)

Everyone needs friends. Even giant pandas. It turns out that they are more sociable than we thought, hanging out together for weeks at a time.

We know very little about wild pandas because they are so rare and live in almost impenetrable forest. But in 2010 and 2011, Vanessa Hull of Michigan State University and her colleagues were given permission to attach GPS tracking collars to five pandas in the Wolong National Nature Reserve in China. The collars transmitted each animal鈥檚 position every four hours, for up to two years.

The team found that the home ranges of individual pandas overlapped and on a few occasions, two animals spent several weeks in close proximity. 鈥淪ometimes the pandas were within 10 or 20 metres of each other, which suggests the pandas were in direct interaction,鈥 Hull says. This happened in autumn, and pandas mate in spring, so it was probably not mating behaviour.

No one knows yet whether these panda hangouts are a sign of some social behaviour we didn鈥檛 know about, or whether the pandas simply aren鈥檛 concerned enough to move away if another panda is close. It is clear, though, that they are laid back about neighbours. 鈥淧andas seem to be quite happy to have other pandas nearby,鈥 says of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not charging around defending mutually exclusive territories.鈥

The team also found that pandas rotated between several core areas, probably following patches of bamboo, their only food source. 鈥淭hey kind of eat their way out of the bamboo, and when it鈥檚 depleted they move on,鈥 says Hull.

Hull鈥檚 experiment is just a first, brief glimpse into the lives of a few pandas. 鈥淲e hope the Chinese government sees the value of doing this kind of study and encourages more of it in the future,鈥 she says.

Journal of Mammalogy,

Topics: Conservation